News of another new model company is great to hear but especially good to
hear that it is coming from Greece! GasPatch Models has sent us news of
a new 1/48th Salmson
2A2 kit soon to hit our market – we have information on all three of their
first kit variations and even drawings from the company that blow the usual CAD
images away – Read on to hear more from this new manufacturer…
Drawings of the resin engine
Our first
model is the Salmson
2A2, which played a key role and was produced in great numbers, but has
hitherto not received appropriate recognition from the plastic model kit
market. For the future, we plan, likewise, to produce models that are not
common but are interesting in their design and historical significance.
We produce this model in three 1:48 versions: Mid, Late, and Japanese boxings.
Mid production
Late Version
Japanese Version
The Salmson
2A2 equipped 52 French escadrilles. In addition, the American
Expeditionary Forces ordered 750 aircraft to equip 10 squadrons. The total
production reached 3250 items, of which 2200 were built by Salmson and the rest
by Latécoère, Hanriot and Desfontainers. After the war, the Japanese air force
ordered about 350 Salmson 2A2s. The Polish, Czechs and Greeks also ordered
small numbers.
The production drawings on this site are worth a look in themselves
The Salmson
2A2 was a robust, two-seated airplane, fast, reliable, and adaptable to other
uses; it was used, for example, as a bomber, and even as a fighter plane. Its
most important innovation was the self-sealing tanks, which contributed to the
avoidance of fire on board, which was one of the main fears of early aviators.
From the pilots....
“The Salmson was a damn good
airplane. It sounded like a bunch of tin cans on the end of a string, but they
could shoot all kinds of holes in it and it would still run… It handled very
nicely; a well-made airplane, very dependable.”
—Captain Phillip R. Babcock of the
88th Aero Squadron
"There is no record of a Salmson
ever having caught fire. This is due to the gas tank being enclosed with a shield
of rubber about an eighth of an inch thick, over which was a strong wire mesh
covering. In combat we soon learned that if a bullet hit the gas tank, the wire
mesh slowed the bullet, and then the flame caused by friction was extinguished
when passing through the rubber covering of the gas tank, which eliminated the
main reasons for a plane being set on fire. I know of no other plane having
this construction at that time. Fear of fire was probably the greatest morale
obstacle one had to get over, and this plane built up great confidence."
"The speed of our Salmson planes
was about 110 miles per hour. In a dive we could get up to 250 miles an hour,
and as our plane was very strong, we were flying without fighter escort, it was
not unusual for us to get to the maximum speed trying to get away from a group
of German fighter airplanes. We were invariably outnumbered by planes which
were lighter and more manoeuvrable."
"By the end of World War I the
91st personnel had received 15 U.S. Distinguished Service Crosses, six French
Croix de Guerre with palm, and one squadron Unit Decoration of the Croix de
Guerre with palm. Our squadron was one of only three U.S. squadrons receiving
this decoration. Seven of the original 18 pilots were eventually made squadron
commanders."
—Capt. Everett R. Cook, commander of
the 91st Aero Squadron, AEF
To find out more about this company please do take a look at their website
GasPatch Models